In a recent news article recalling the 2004 closing of the
Electrolux plant in Greenville with the loss of 2,700 jobs, Gov. Jennifer
Granholm scorned the landmark trade agreements of the past 15 years with a
dismissive quip, "NAFTA and CAFTA have given us the shafta."

No doubt this was welcomed by the union bosses who comprise a
core component of the governor’s political base, and for whom reversing the
growth in trade is near the top of their agenda. However, the remark suggests
that Gov. Granholm doesn’t know or doesn’t care about the benefits that trade
agreements like those with Canada and Mexico (NAFTA) and Central American
countries (CAFTA) have brought to Michigan’s economy.

The competitors who are eating Michigan’s lunch aren’t Mexico or Canada, but other states where investors and entrepreneurs enjoy lower tax rates, better labor climates and fewer excessive and unreasonable regulations.

Foreign trade is very
important to Michigan, and is becoming more so. Indeed, the export market is one
of the few areas where our economy is growing — this state’s exports to NAFTA
and CAFTA countries grew 38 percent between 2001 and 2007, or 2.7 percent a year
in inflation-adjusted terms.

In 2007, Michigan produced $44.7 billion worth of goods for
export, which accounted for more than 10 percent of the entire output of this
state’s economy. Our exports rose by fully 10 percent between 2006 and 2007.
Most of that trade — 70 percent — is to countries that are parties to the
specific trade agreements mentioned by Gov. Granholm.

Trade is growing with other markets, too: Michigan’s exports to
China grew 29 percent last year. That nation is now the third largest market for
this state’s goods, surpassing Japan and Germany just last year.

Of course trade is necessarily a two-way street — Michigan also
imports things from our trading partners. Free trade does not necessarily mean
an increased trade deficit. The United States as a whole had a $3 billion trade
deficit with CAFTA signatories prior to its implementation; that has been
reversed to a $2 billion surplus today. Excluding oil and gas, a modest deficit
with NAFTA countries has barely increased. Meanwhile, growing trade has allowed
for middle-class Americans to save on consumer goods, and for more American
products to be sold abroad.

A related point is that while unions and their political allies
have tried to make "outsourcing" a dirty word, they speak less of the other side
of the coin, which is insourcing
of jobs to Michigan by foreign-owned companies. These firms now employ some
202,300 Michigan workers, according to the Organization for International
Investment.

Indeed, it was the loss of 2,700 of those "insourced" workers
that triggered Gov. Granholm’s anti-trade outburst — the Electrolux plant was
Swedish-owned. But one might question why the governor focused on just these
2,700 lost jobs, when another 541,992 Michigan jobs evaporated in the same year,
or more than 10 percent of all the payroll jobs in the state.

That massive loss wasn’t the cause of major depression in the
state because another 553,960 jobs were
created here that year. Such "job churning" happens every year and
is a characteristic of the dynamic, wealth- and innovation-creating U.S.
economy, and its magnitude demonstrates the folly of state "targeted incentive"
and subsidy programs aimed at attracting particular firms or industries, as
opposed to creating a friendly overall business climate.

The reality that Gov. Granholm’s free trade hostility seeks to
evade is that Michigan’s decline is not due to CAFTA, NAFTA or any other such
agreement — except perhaps one created in 1787: the U.S. Constitution and
its commerce clause.

Specifically, the competitors who are eating Michigan’s lunch
aren’t Mexico or Canada, but other states where investors and entrepreneurs
enjoy lower tax rates, better labor climates and fewer excessive and
unreasonable regulations. Foreign automakers have opened dozens of new plants in
the United States in the past 25 years, and the fact that only one (and that a
joint venture with Ford) is in Michigan has nothing to do with foreign trade
agreements and everything to do with Michigan’s unfriendly business climate.

Blaming the state’s economic malaise on free trade may score
political points with militant labor, but if anything it only worsens our
problems. The governor should instead focus on reversing the high taxes, toxic
labor climate and regulatory overreach that are really killing Michigan, and
stop postponing the transformational government restructuring, downsizing and
privatizing that are a prerequisite for those reforms.

#####

Jack McHugh is the senior legislative analyst and James M.
Hohman is a research assistant for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a
research and educational institute headquartered in Midland, Mich.
Permission to reprint in whole or in part is
hereby granted, provided that the authors and the Center are properly cited.